The Capital

Tehran’s proxies scale back attacks

Retaliator­y strikes by US quiet militia attacks on its bases

- By Farnaz Fassihi, Eric Schmitt and Julian E. Barnes

Iran has made a concerted effort to rein in militias in Iraq and Syria after the United States retaliated last month with a series of airstrikes for the killing of three Army reservists in January.

Initially, there were regional concerns that the tit-for-tat violence would lead to an escalation of the Middle East conflict. But since the Feb. 2 U.S. strikes, U.S. officials say, there have been no attacks by Iranbacked militias on U.S. bases in Iraq and only two minor ones in Syria.

Before then, the U.S. military logged at least 170 attacks against U.S. troops in four months, Pentagon officials said.

The relative quiet reflects decisions by both sides and suggests that Iran does have some level of control over the militias.

The Biden administra­tion has made clear that Iran would be held accountabl­e for miscalcula­tions and operations by proxy forces, but it has avoided any direct attack on Iran. The U.S. response “may be having some effect,” Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, a retired head of the Pentagon’s Central Command, said in an interview.

“The question is, are the militias attacking or not?” he added, “and at least for now, they are not.”

The lull also marks a sharp turnaround by Iran. Tehran had for months directed its regional proxies in Iraq and Syria to attack U.S. bases in the Middle East as part of a wider battle against Israel, which is fighting Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

The U.S. and Iranian officials interviewe­d for this article spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligen­ce matters.

As the proxies’ attacks intensifie­d, culminatin­g in the deaths of three American soldiers, Iranian leaders worried that the level of autonomy provided to the militias was starting to backfire and might drive them into war, according to Iranian and U.S. officials.

“They are scared of direct confrontat­ion with the U.S., they know that if Americans are killed again it would mean war,” said Sina Azodi, a lecturer at George Washington University and an expert on Iran’s national security. “They had to put the brakes on the militia and convince them that a war with the U.S. could harm Tehran first and then by extension the entire axis.”

Iran finances, arms and provides technical support and training for a network of militant groups in the region that it calls the Axis of Resistance.

The groups include Hezbollah in Lebanon; the Houthis in Yemen; militias in Iraq, such as Kataib Hezbollah and Hashd al-Shaabi; Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza; and militias in Syria. While Iran directs an overall strategy for the axis, the level of day-to-day control and coordinati­on runs a spectrum. Tehran has most influence over Hezbollah, with the Syrian and Iraqi militia falling in the middle and the Houthis being the most autonomous.

The Iranian effort to rein in the forces began soon after the killing of the three American soldiers in a drone attack in Jordan on Jan. 28, as Washington vowed a forceful response.

Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the high-level Iranian general killed by an American drone strike in 2020, kept the Shiite militias in Iraq and Syria on a tight leash. That was largely because, for most of his tenure, war was raging in both countries, and he commanded the militia to fight Americans and then Islamic State terrorist groups. But when Brig. Gen. Esmail Ghaani succeeded him, most of those conflicts had settled, and Ghaani assumed a hands-off leadership style, setting only broad directions, according to analysts.

Ghaani, commander in chief of the Quds Forces, the branch of the Revolution­ary Guard tasked with overseeing the proxies, has nonetheles­s been involved in coordinati­ng the strategy toward Israel and the United States for the various militias during the current war in Gaza.

He led a series of emergency meetings in late January in Tehran and Baghdad with strategist­s, senior commanders of the Revolution­ary Guard and senior commanders of the militia to redraw plans and avert war with the United States, according to two

Iranians affiliated with the Guard, one of them a military strategist.

In Baghdad, Ghaani held a long meeting with representa­tives of all the Shia militant groups who operate under the umbrella of a collective they call Islamic Resistance in Iraq. The collective had been carrying out and then claiming responsibi­lity for dozens of attacks on U.S. bases, and Washington blamed the group for the drone attack that killed the Americans.

Ghaani told them that Iran and the various militia groups had made enough gains in pressuring the United States because President Joe Biden was facing intense criticism for his staunch support of Israel and fissures had emerged between him and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, the two Iranians affiliated with the Guard said. A war between Tehran and Washington could also jeopardize the long-term goal of rooting out the United States from the region, he told the group, the two Iranians said.

The outcome of Ghaani’s consultati­ons was a new strategy that called for Iraqi militias to stop all attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq, including in the Kurdistan region in the north, and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. In Syria, militia groups have been asked to lower the intensity of attacks on U.S. bases to avoid fatalities, according to Iranian officials and U.S. intelligen­ce assessment­s. But the groups active against Israel in Lebanon and Yemen would continue at pace, the Iranians familiar with the strategy said.

Once the attacks on Americans subsided, the United States withheld striking at least one senior militia leader after Feb. 2 to avoid disrupting the pause and stoking more hostilitie­s, according to a Defense Department official.

The military strategist with the Guard said Iran believed a direct war with the United States would work in favor of Israel at a time when world opinion had turned against it because of the heavy toll in civilian deaths and suffering in Gaza. After more than a decade, the strategist said, Iran believes that it is enjoying a surge of popularity among Arabs, who are angry that their own countries’ leaders are not doing enough to support Palestinia­ns.

While a key part of the Washington-Tehran confrontat­ion is on a hiatus, other destabiliz­ing dynamics in the region remain active and unpredicta­ble. Iran and Israel are engaged in a continuing shadow war, including a recent covert assault by Israel on two main gas pipelines in Iran and strikes on residentia­l compounds linked to Iran in Damascus, the Syrian capital. Iran has not yet openly retaliated against Israel after those attacks.

 ?? ARASH KHAMOOSHI/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Brig. Gen. Esmail Ghaani, center, seen Feb. 4 in Tehran, leads Iran’s Quds Forces.
ARASH KHAMOOSHI/THE NEW YORK TIMES Brig. Gen. Esmail Ghaani, center, seen Feb. 4 in Tehran, leads Iran’s Quds Forces.

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